Adam Mathias joined the board of ISNA with an impressive list of credentials and passion for our mission. Adam first learned of ISNA’s work when his sister, Robin, fell in love with ISNA founder Cheryl Chase. Having Cheryl as a family member, witnessing the progress ISNA has made over the years, and having a deep and personal understanding of the struggles sexual minorities face because of his own identity as a gay man, Adam decided to volunteer his energy and skills toward advancing ISNA’s mission. An accomplished playwright and fundraiser, Adam has produced and managed advertising and media for his own play and helped many non-profit theater groups raise funds.

Alice Dreger,PhD began her association with ISNA in 1996 in response to Cheryl Chase’s request for help changing the medical treatment of people born with intersex. One of the few non-intersex people to become a pillar of the intersex rights movement, Alice served ISNA for nine years, acting as Chair and President of the Board for six years, Chair of the Fundraising Committee for one year, and as the first Director of Medical Education. These titles do not capture the extent to which Alice often functioned as behind-the-scenes glue helping to hold ISNA together. She wrote, ghost-wrote, and edited countless articles, grants, letters, hand-outs, and blogs for ISNA, recruited and aided allies, directed numerous major fundraising campaigns, and played a central role in policy development and advocacy strategizing. She and her husband, Aron Sousa (a member of ISNA’s Medical Advisory Board) have also been major financial donors to ISNA.

Angela Moreno Lippert has been involved with the Intersex Society since 1996 when she appeared in ISNA’s first video production, Hermaphrodites Speak! Since then, her intersex activism has been featured in such diverse venues as the Chicago Tribune, FOX News Chicago, On the Issues, Ms. Magazine and Mademoiselle. She has spoken publicly on the subject of improving treatment for people with intersex conditions and their families, including an appearance as keynote speaker at GenderPAC’s 2001 National Conferenc

When asked how her previous experience as a radiologist working with breast cancer prepared her for her work with ISNA, Baratz says, “I have been practicing in the specialty of breast radiology for 16 years.

Aron Sousa was a founding member of the ISNA board. He received his medical degree from Indiana University in 1996 and is currently Acting Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and faculty in the Department of Medicine at Michigan State University. He is a general internist by training and has particular interest in evidence-based medicine (including the lack thereof in intersex care). He is also interested in how the medical community can help adult intersex people. He has used his access to medical education to help trainees understand the illogic of the surgic

I decided to become a speaker on behalf of ISNA due to my diagnosis of complete androgen insensitivity syndrome at age 26. This was not the first revelation which came about when I was 19 years of age and trying to find out why I hadn’t had the normal female rites of passage at the onset of puberty. I had secretly gotten my physician father’s textbook on gynaecology and began turning page after page. I remember sitting cross-legged on my bed and seeing a picture of a nude woman with the black bar across her eyes. She looked just like me with the absence of body hair. There was only a page and a half of information but from what it described, I knew who and what I was — finally.

Bruce Wilson received his M.D. from the University of Illinois Medical School in 1975 and is a board certified Pediatric Endocrinologist at DeVos Children’s Hospital in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Pediatrics and Human Development at Michigan State University. As a physician working with the U.S. armed services from 1978 to 1988, Dr. Wilson served children and families around the world, including in Iran, Germany, and Washington, D.C. at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Today at DeVos Children’s Hospital he leads multidisciplinary teams caring for children with chronic illnesses (including diabetes) and children with intersex. Although he maintains a full practice and teaches through the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine educational programs, including serving as the Director of the Pediatric Endocrine Section from 1989 to 1999, Dr. Wilson also maintains an active research program into the etiologies and psychosocial effects of pediatric endocrinologic conditions. His studies of these subjects have been published in the Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science, Pediatric Cardiology, the Journal of Medical Genetics, and the Journal of Clinical Ethics. Dr. Wilson has presented papers at numerous professional conferences and parent conferences, and has received research grants from Eli Lilly, the Howard and Howard Foundation, and the BSRG. For his work in medical education he has three times been awarded the Residency Teaching Award at Michigan State.

Cade McCall served as a gratis intern for ISNA and donated his considerable talents to managing our web page and several other projects. He is currently working on a PhD in social psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.